FACING THE MUSIC (CITY): THE ATLANTA FED'S BOSTIC MEETS THE PUBLIC IN NASHVILLE
The following information was released by the
Atlanta Fed president
Speaking to an audience in
"My job is to take these three narratives and pull them all together into a large-scale narrative, and that's the narrative I use to inform what I think is important for monetary policy," Bostic said. He then presents this narrative to the
Bostic's brand of transparency is an example of the
Explaining his approach to determining an appropriate monetary policy stance was among several topics Bostic addressed during an hourlong conversation hosted
Pryora Fisk alumna whose day job is executive vice president, chief legal officer, and corporate secretary for Lowe's Companies Inc.prefaced her question to Bostic about housing affordability by citing the Atlanta Fed's recent analysisof rising housing prices in greater
Bostic offered two perspectives, informed by a career spent evaluating housing needs and housing market conditions to inform public policies and programs. First, he noted, housing is subject to the law of supply and demand: housing prices rise as demand exceeds supply. Second, even wage hikes that might be intended to close the affordability gap won't fix the problem if demand continues to exceed supply, because prices likely will rise commensurately.
"Affordability is a ratio. It's the cost over income," Bostic said. "You can address affordability on the income side. But there is this fundamental baseline of supply. If there is an imbalance between demand and supply, supply has to be part of the solution." Bostic noted that several cities in the Southeast are considering an array of shifts in land-use policies that are intended to boost the housing supply, including allowing greater residential density in neighborhoods and permitting residences to be built in industrial areas.
Pryor asked Bostic to discuss the
Bostic responded, "I'm going to broaden this out, because I think it's a bigger issue. The
Bostic said the Fed has a clearly defined set of goals: to foster stable prices and maximum employment. In addition to this congressional mandate, the Fed must consider the effect of its policies over the longer term. Bostic said he views the key to his job as remaining dispassionate and analytical as he focuses on making policy decisions intended to promote economic stability and sustained maximum employment.
"I feel the institution has a good chance to retain its independence," Bostic concluded. "We understand our charge. It creates tension sometimes. But central banks across the world all face the same tensions. If you're going to take this job, you have to understand that's part of what the role is."
Bostic fielded a range of other questions from Pryor and the audience:
On generative artificial intelligence: Bostic said it differs from other disruptors because it will touch workers in all sectors and at all skill levels.
On a potential recession: Bostic said he's not aware of anyone thinking a catastrophe is on the horizon, though some consumers are scaling back their purchases.
On how the private sector can partner with the nation's federally designated
As the session ended and Pryor asked Bostic if he had any concluding remarks, he returned to the notion of transparency. Bostic encouraged the audience to take informational materials the Atlanta Fed had provided, sign up for communications, and answer the phone if the Fed calls. "Take the call and talk to our folks," Bostic said. "They will bring that information to me in



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